Transcript Lecture 2b
Coordination in a Supply Chain
Bent Steenholt Kragelund
[email protected]
Lack of Supply Chain Coordination…
• Supply chain coordination – all stages of the chain take
actions that are aligned and increase total supply chain
surplus
• Requires that each stage share information and take into
account the effects of its actions on the other stages
• Lack of coordination results when:
– Objectives of different stages conflict
– Information moving between stages is delayed or distorted
…creates the bullwhip effect
Bullwhip effect causes problems
• Manufacturing Costs
• Inventory cost
• Replenishment lead time
• Transportation cost
• Shipping and receiving cost
• Product availability
• Relationship across the supply chain
• Profitability
Beergame Debriefing, by Kai Riemer, http://www.beergame.org
3
Structure creates behaviour
• different people in the same organizational structure produce
the same (or at least similar) results.
Beergame Debriefing, by Kai Riemer, http://www.beergame.org
4
Real world reactions
• A typical organizational response would be to find the
"person responsible" (the guy placing the orders or the
inventory manager) and blame him.
• But the game clearly demonstrates how inappropriate this
response is
– different people following different decision rules for ordering
create similar oscillations.
• We have to change the structural setup!
Beergame Debriefing, by Kai Riemer, http://www.beergame.org
5
Obstacles to Coordination in a Supply Chain
• Incentive Obstacles
• Information Processing Obstacles
• Operational Obstacles
• Pricing Obstacles
• Behavioral Obstacles
Incentive Obstacles
Occur when incentives offered to different stages or
participants in a supply chain lead to actions that increase
variability and reduce total supply chain profits
• Local optimization within functions or stages of a supply
chain
• Sales force incentives
Information Processing Obstacles
When demand information is distorted as it moves
between different stages of the supply chain, leading
to increased variability in orders within the supply
chain
• Forecasting based on orders, not customer demand
• Lack of information sharing
Operational Obstacles
Occur when placing and filling orders lead to an
increase in variability
• Ordering in large lots
• Large replenishment lead
times
• Rationing and shortage
gaming
Pricing Obstacles
When pricing policies for a product lead to an increase
in variability of orders placed
• Lot-size based quantity
decisions
• Price fluctuations
Behavioral Obstacles
•
Problems in learning within organizations that contribute to information
distortion
1.
Each stage of the supply chain views its actions locally and is unable to
see the impact of its actions on other stages
2.
Different stages of the supply chain react to the current local situation
rather than trying to identify the root causes
3.
Different stages of the supply chain blame one another for the
fluctuations
4.
No stage of the supply chain learns from its actions over time
5.
A lack of trust among supply chain partners causes them to be
opportunistic at the expense of overall supply chain performance
Managerial Levers to Achieve Coordination
• Aligning goals and incentives
• Improving information accuracy
• Improving operational performance
• Designing pricing strategies to stabilize orders
• Building strategic partnerships and trust
Aligning Goals and Incentives
• Align goals and incentives so that every participant in supply
chain activities works to maximize total supply chain profits
• Align goals across the supply chain
• Align incentives across functions
• Pricing for coordination
• Alter sales force incentives from sell-in (to the retailer) to
sell-through (by the retailer)
Improving Information Visibility and Accuracy
• Sharing point of sale data
• Implementing collaborative forecasting and planning
• Designing single-stage control of replenishment
– Continuous replenishment programs (CRP)
– Vendor managed inventory (VMI)
Improving Operational Performance
• Reducing replenishment lead time
• Reducing lot sizes
• Rationing based on past sales and sharing
information to limit gaming
Designing Pricing Strategies to Stabilize Orders
• Encouraging retailers to order in smaller lots and
reduce forward buying
• Moving from lot size-based to volume-based quantity
discounts
• Stabilizing pricing
• Building strategic partnerships and trust
Continuous Replenishment and Vendor-Managed
Inventories
• A single point of replenishment
• CRP – wholesaler or manufacturer replenishes
based on POS data
• VMI – manufacturer or supplier is responsible for all
decisions regarding inventory
• Substitutes
Collaborative Planning, Forecasting, and Replenishment
(CPFR)
• Sellers and buyers in a supply chain may collaborate
along any or all of the following
1.
2.
3.
4.
Strategy and planning
Demand and supply management
Execution
Analysis
• Retail event collaboration
• DC replenishment collaboration
Common CPFR Scenarios
CPFR Scenario
Where Applied in Supply Chain
Industries Where Applied
Retail event collaboration
Highly promoted channels or
categories
All industries other than those that
practice EDLP
DC replenishment collaboration
Retail DC or distributor DC
Drugstores, hardware, grocery
Store replenishment collaboration
Direct store delivery or retail DCto-store delivery
Mass merchants, club stores
Collaborative assortment planning
Apparel and seasonal goods
Department stores, specialty retail
Collaborative Planning, Forecasting, and Replenishment
(CPFR)
Figure 10-4
Achieving Coordination in Practice
• Quantify the bullwhip effect
• Get top management commitment for coordination
• Devote resources to coordination
• Focus on communication with other stages
• Try to achieve coordination in the entire supply chain network
• Use technology to improve connectivity in the supply chain
• Share the benefits of coordination equitably
Summary of Learning Objectives
1.
Describe supply chain coordination and the bullwhip effect, and
their impact on supply chain performance
2.
Identify obstacles to coordination in a supply chain
3.
Discuss managerial levers that help achieve coordination in a
supply chain
4.
Understand the different forms of CPFR possible in a supply chain